Enrique Bonne
Creator of the pilón — Enrique Bonne developed the pilón dance style in eastern Cuba in the 1950s, one of several regional popular dance forms that emerged alongside the larger genres documented in Cuban music history.
About
Bonne was a musician from the Oriente province who developed the pilón — a dance and musical style named after the large wooden mortars (pilones) used to process coffee in eastern Cuba, whose rhythmic stamping movement the dance reflects. The pilón was popularized by Pacho Alonso in the 1960s and became briefly fashionable in Havana before fading into a historical footnote.
Bonne's work is a reminder that Cuban popular music was not solely a Havana phenomenon — regional styles emerged throughout the island, and eastern Cuba in particular has been a persistent source of rhythmic innovation, from changüí through pilón to contemporary música cubana.
Rumba is the most African-rooted of all Cuban music and dance forms — born in the streets, courtyards, and docks of Havana and matanzas"> Matanzas in the late 19th century, with no European instruments, no salon setting, and no pretense of European propriety.
Lees meer >Vóór son, vóór danzón, vóór welk benoemd genre dan ook — was er al Nengón en Changüí in de bergen en valleien van oostelijk Cuba (Oriente, met name de provincie Guantánamo). Dit zijn de oudste overgebleven wortels van de Cubaanse populaire muziek.
Lees meer >Vóór son, vóór danzón, vóór welk benoemd genre dan ook — was er al Nengón en Changüí in de bergen en valleien van oostelijk Cuba (Oriente, met name de provincie Guantánamo). Dit zijn de oudste overgebleven wortels van de Cubaanse populaire muziek.
Lees meer >Cuba is the largest island in the Caribbean and the birthplace of some of the world's most influential music and dance traditions. African, Spanish, and French cultural streams collided here over centuries of colonial history, producing an extraordinary creative culture that exported itself across the globe.
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